Bang Galore
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Indian legal system is irrelevant on US soil.
Let me give you an (admittedly extreme) example.
-- Let's say you and I come from a country where slavery is legal.
-- We sign a contract saying I will be your slave and we go to America.
-- Once on US soil, I run away.
-- You harass my family in the old country to force me to return and "honor" my contract.
-- You ask the US authorities to arrest me and deport me to the old country.
-- The US will not do that and may even help my family escape being held hostage.
I'm not interested in what is relevant on U.S. soil, the point remains that the U.S. helped spirit away an Indian resident in India on whom summons were issued by an Indian court. It is not relevant whether or not some U.S. authority saw the summons as an attempt to pressure, it still remains a valid summons and they are guilty of attempting to subvert the Indian judicial system.
As for your analogy, that is for the U.S. to decide. The consequences for such actions will reside elsewhere. Not only did this case involve representatives of a foreign government, it also involved the judiciary of that country. No one in India will agree to give up judicial oversight of its citizens in India simply because the U.S. deems fit to make a case. Whether or not pressure was applied legally is moot, what is the argument that such pressure cannot be applied? It is done everywhere, including the U.S., the call is for the courts in question to decide whether there is any merit in the case brought before it. If you subvert Indian judicial process yet expect that yours should be completely respected, I'm afraid things don't work that way. There are and probably will be consequences.